raid homes and plunder houses
Looting, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǎ Ji ā Ji é sh è, which means Gang Gang to rob property. It's from yuhuchun.
Notes on Idioms
Robbing: robbing; abandoning: housing.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth fold of yuhuchun written by Wuhan Minister of the Yuan Dynasty: "to see Juezi pouting on the earth is as strong as a family robber.
Idiom usage
In a derogatory sense, it refers to robbery. The second chapter of the outlaws of the Marsh: "you are the damned ones who kill and set fire, rob families and houses, and commit great crimes." Chapter 12 of Shi Naian's outlaws of the Marsh: since then, Wang Lun has been willing to teach Lin Chong to take the fourth place and Zhu GUI to take the fifth. From then on, the five heroes robbed their homes in Liangshanpo. Shi Naian, Ming Dynasty, the 60th chapter of the whole story of the Water Margin: "in recent years, a group of strong men from Song Jiang have been fighting and robbing families and houses in ponei, where the officers and soldiers have been arresting and stealing. They can't get close to him." In Ye Shengtao's four or three episodes: Escape: "bandits often make trouble and rob families and houses." they live this kind of life forever.
Chinese PinYin : dǎ jiā jié shè
raid homes and plunder houses
particularly brilliant in the ending. qǔ zhōng zòu yǎ
the nation is prosperous and the people are strong and powerful. guó fù mín fēng